1950s Women Essay

791 Words2 Pages

Wife and Mother Portrayal The women of the 1950’s are portrayed as happy, lovely, domestic, the cook, the maid, a mother, and loyal wife to their breadwinner husbands. The husbands worked at their well-paying jobs while the women’s role was to stay home, cook, clean, and take care of the children. These women are well dressed in elegant dresses, high heels, pearl necklace, and always looking like they were ready to go somewhere, and portraying the joy of a clean home or a new appliance. The roles started to shift in the 70’s with “Mary Tyler Moore” as an independent woman who was single, living by herself, working and forming bonds with friends and co-workers. These friends were like a surrogate family to Mary. This later shifted to more female roles and men becoming more like accessories on these shows, only there to help …show more content…

They can swap with men, they can be single, ambitious, or sit at home and rule the kitchen, but they always have to go back to their gender. Of course, there are exceptions to the rule of the roles, but as the saying goes the exceptions help strengthen the rule. I shall say it would be impossible for any sitcom to portray any woman as “rightfully” as a specific role or force them. We can let them be individual human beings doing whatever type of lifestyle they choose. Many women today are capable of creating, directing, writing, funding, marketing and selling their own forms of entertainment. The mother of all funny ladies, Lucy Ricardo was equal parts, naïve, silly and scheming, always trying to achieve her goal only to be put back in her domestic role. Women seem not to ever be enlisted as comedians, or the focus of a TV show, because they say females are preoccupied with family and personal issues. Women characters always show emotions, lack of strength, independence, and complex, and thus will be stereotyped by the

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